A HIDDEN MARYLAND GEM
Forty miles south of Washington, DC, off of Maryland’s Charles County shoreline near a little town named Nanjemoy, the weather- and water-beaten remains of more than two hundred ships lie in their final resting places in the shallow waters of the Potomac River’s Mallows Bay. “Mallows Bay is the richest marine heritage site in the United States,” according to Samuel Orlando, Chesapeake Bay Regional Coordinator at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) office of National Maritime Sanctuaries. “In addition to being reflective of America’s emergence as a naval superpower during World War I, the Ghost Fleet provides the structure for a unique marine ecosystem.”
In November of 2015, the emergent and submerged vessels of this Ghost Fleet, the largest shipwrecked fleet in the Western Hemisphere, were nominated as a candidate to become part of a national “underwater park” system of 13 national marine sanctuaries which encompasses more than 620,000 square miles of marine and Great Lakes waters. NOAA’s National Marine Sanctuary System protects unique water habitats and is home to diverse aquatic ecosystems ranging from kelp forests to coral reefs to the playgrounds of humpback whales. Pending the results of current public outreach soliciting input on four alternatives, the Mallows Bay-Potomac River Sanctuary would become the 14th National Marine Sanctuary under NOAA’s care.
If you’re concerned that there was a Battle of Mallows Bay on American soil during WWI that sunk hundreds of ships, and that you’ve somehow gravely overlooked a key event in U.S. history, fret not. The origins of the Ghost Fleet may have its roots in America’s burgeoning war effort, but it was largely the industrial complex and economy that grew out of World War I that led to the fleet’s demise.
One hundred years ago this month, President Woodrow Wilson signed off on what was at that time the greatest shipbuilding program in U.S. history by approving an order for 1000 300-foot-long steamships that were to be sailed across the Atlantic as troop supply transports. The 1000 ships were to be built in only 18 months. Each would cost from $700,000 to $1 million to build. The shipbuilding was to take place across nearly 90 shipyards, and the ships were to be constructed of wood instead of steel, saving shipbuilders time and money and reserving U.S. steel for vessels engaged in combat operations.
Production did not occur on schedule. By October 1918, only 134 ships had been built, with 260 partially completed. For those of you who know your history, the Armistice of Compiègne was signed on November 11, 1918. Germany surrendered, and the war was over. None of Wilson’s transport ships had crossed the Atlantic.
The steamship fleet project continued despite the war’s end, but by September 1919, only 264 ships had been constructed. The vessel’s shelf life looked bleak. The industrial revolution was bringing diesel engines aboard for propulsion; coal-burning vessels became obsolete. Wilson’s steamships had been built at such a rapid pace that construction was frequently shoddy. Finally, the shipbuilding industry had moved to steel over wood. Wilson’s fleet had no purpose.
In 1922, the Western Marine and Salvage Company (WMSC) purchased 233 of the ships for $750,000. WMSC towed the un-purposed fleet to Widewater, VA, (just south of Quantico) for shipbreaking, planning to salvage usable materials, burn what remained, sink the ships’ hulls into Widewater marshland, and cover them with river dredging. Protests from Widewater watermen and community members about the “salvage process” soon resulted in WMSC buying nearly 600 acres across the river in Mallows Bay and moving their operations to Maryland.

Despite several years of shipbreaking, WMSC never recovered its initial investment. The stock market crashed in 1929, and WMSC declared bankruptcy. What remained of the 170 ships brought to Mallows Bay began decades of decomposition. During World War II, Baltimore’s Bethlehem Steel attempted to recover in-demand scrap metal from the Ghost Fleet, but that shipbreaking program also proved economically unviable.
Although some Mallows Bay watermen have not welcomed the potential “sanctuary” designation, the establishment of a Mallows Bay-Potomac River Sanctuary will, according to Orlando, not only protect the bay’s natural and cultural resources, but will also support increased recreational access, enhance publicly accessible shoreline, and foster an increase in currently existing recreational resources. Orlando has become an expert on the large-scale potential benefits of a Mallows Bay Sanctuary and relayed that the sanctuary would incorporate on-the-water passage markers for recreational kayakers and canoers and would add a fourth water trail to the Potomac’s existing three.
Natural and cultural resources would be protected. “NOAA will be able to track sediment and ecosystem elements, protect the wrecks, and support marine habitats and healthier populations,” said Orlando. Enhanced awareness of the area has led to support for a new monitoring buoy which will provide active weather and water data for local watermen and will feature Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) of marine life and anthropogenic activity.
The largest benefits of a sanctuary designation are predicted to result from the partnerships, public interest, and volunteer efforts that are on the rise to research and help maintain the Mallows Bay ecosystem. “There is a catalyst effect on public care for the area’s resources,” said Orlando. “Community volunteers, Boy Scout and Girl Scout [groups], new projects from public schools, and research ideas coming from across the country” are a direct result of raising visibility of the ecosystem and its archeological treasures.
The public comment period on whether Mallows Bay should become a sanctuary and the determination of the sanctuary’s geographic footprint closed on March 31. According to Orlando, it will take approximately one year before NOAA can evaluate all stakeholder inputs and finalize a site designation.
On the Maryland side of the Potomac River just west of Chesapeake Bay, the largest shipwreck fleet in the Western Hemisphere sits half-sunk and decomposing.
In the early 20th century, hundreds of U.S. vessels were sent to Mallows Bay to be destroyed and scrapped – and to this day the remains of dozens can still be seen in the shallow water.
How did the ships end up here and why were they abandoned?
Call For One Thousand Ships
It was also one of the most expensive in history; each ship would cost the taxpayer almost one million dollars.The story of the ships at Mallows Bay begins when the United States entered World War I. The U.S. had warships, but a shortage of transport vessels led President Woodrow Wilson to approve, in April of 1917, the greatest shipbuilding program in history: an order for 1,000 300-ft long steamships to be built in only 18 months.
To monitor progress and enforce the contracts, the Emergency Fleet Corporation (EFC) was formed to oversee the 87 shipyards who would participate in the program.
With little time to ramp up production and prepare for the order, the shipbuilders were pressed to reach deadlines. To save time and money the builders used wood rather than the more expensive steel, at the time reserved for vessels that would see combat.
The lack of effective oversight was realized when a Congressional report in October of 1918 revealed only 134 ships had been completed. A year and a half into the program, this was well behind schedule.
Over 260 ships were less than half-completed, and hundreds more had not yet been started.
Immediately Obsolete

Germany would surrender on November 11th of 1918. At that time, none of the quickly-commissioned EFC vessels had yet crossed the Atlantic. To this point, the program had officially approved funding and paid for 731 wooden steamships. While over 130 ships had been completed, only 98 had actually been delivered. those, only 76 had been used to carry cargo as intended.
Despite the war being over the shipbuilding continued building. By September of 1919 the builders had delivered 264 steamships to the government. By this time the United States had no use for the ships; they were left to rot while the powers that be determined how to re-purpose them.
Complicating the situation were allegations of poor construction; corners were allegedly cut to speed up the building process. Ships suffered leaking issues, were poorly caulked, and were too small to be efficient long-distance shippers. Additionally, the invention of the diesel engine made the coal-burning vessels obsolete.
After World War I the war-effort levels of demand and high costs of steel subsided, moving the shipbuilding industry toward steel construction for all vessels. With steel becoming cheaper and more readily available, the end had come for the wooden EFC steamships.
Salvage Attempt 1: Western Marine
By the end of December in 1920, Congress realized the failure and decided to take action. Nearly 290 unused leaking ships were being temporarily stored and cared for in the James River at a cost of nearly $50,000 per month – something had to be done.
Hoping to recoup some money, Congress listed all vessels from the program for sale at a steep discount. Two years later in September of 1922, Western Marine & Salvage Company (WMSC) purchased 233 of the ships in the fleet for $750,000.

The plan was to tow the fleet to an authorized mooring area near Widewater, VA for scrapping. They would retrieve the re-usable materials, then burn and sink the remaining hull into the marsh where it would be buried beneath dredged soil.
Complaints from local watermen and nature activists halted the operations at Widewater on the Potomac. In April of 1924, WMSC purchased 566 acres opposite Widewater in Mallows Bay on the Maryland side of the Potomac River.
This did not stop the protests, so WMSC was forced to act quickly. On November 7th, 1925, workers for the Western Marine & Salvage Company torched the ships in the bay (above left). Western Marine would continue salvage operations for the next few years but would never recover their investment costs. By the stock market crash in October of 1929, WMSC had brought 170 ships to the bay.
The dire economy of the Great Depression took down Western Marine with it – they would file for bankruptcy in 1931 and abandon the ships at Mallows Bay. For the next ten years the desolate fleet was left to rot and scavengers would do their own salvaging.
Salvage Attempt 2: Bethlehem Steel

As World War II approached, the threat of war saw the price for scrap metal skyrocket. The U.S. government allocated $200,000 to Bethlehem Steel in the early 1940s to recover over 20,000 tons of iron thought to still be in the wrecks of Mallows Bay.
By 1943 Bethlehem Steel terminated the program after spending over $360,000 on salvaging – with little to show for it. When Bethlehem Steel was done, there were still over 100 ship hulks left in the bay.

The sixties saw a renewed effort to clean up the area, with Congress bending to the calls of local watermen and initially approving the Army Corps of Engineers to spend up to $350,000 to clean up Mallows Bay. The bid failed when it was discovered the watermen had partnered up with the local power company who was looking to re-claim the land around Mallows Bay for private enterprise.
In March of 1993, a Maryland grant approved a study to research the fleet at Mallows Bay and measure its cost of disposal, effect on the environment, and to inventory what vessels were left for historical and archaeological purposes.
Over the next two years the researchers would identify 88 wooden ships left over from the original EFC program. Researchers also discovered the bay was used by Western Marine for more than just EFC vessels; twelve barges were discovered, as well as a Revolutionary War-era longboat, several 18th century schooners, miscellaneous workboats.
Vessels would continue to be abandoned in Mallows Bay as recent as the 1980s. Researchers learned the hulks had created a mini-ecosystem in the Bay for fish & many birds. The heavy concentration of wood enriched the shallow bay’s sediment, and the absence of diesel and oil polluting the water has presented a healthy habitat for many species of wildlife.
Ultimately, the EFC program was reported to have built 285 ships through August of 1920, and of those – 152 ended up in Mallows Bay within nine years. Experts estimate the remains visible in Mallows Bay today only represent 30% of the fleet sent there for salvage.
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